A federal judge has ruled that the Chicago Board of Education must find
seats in substantially white schools for black and Latino students by
mid-December. U.S. District Judge Charles Kocoras ruled that the white
students who transferred into the already substantially white schools
from outside their neighborhoods might have to leave to make room for
black and Latino students. He also ruled the school district must
reallocate some funds used on desegregation for use on students in
racially isolated schools. Kocoras' ruling Tuesday was in response to
U.S. Justice Department claims that the nation's third-largest school
district violated the latest version of its desegregation agreement by
not offering any racial transfers this year to improve integration.
Chicago school officials claimed the district was doing all it could to
promote integration but had no room to accommodate more minority
students in the white schools. "It's hard to believe there are no open
seats," Kocoras said as he ordered school officials to take another
look at capacity reports. He also ordered the officials to identify
children offered transfers under other programs who did not show up at
the primarily white schools, opening more seats. "We'll do what's
legal, practical and educationally the right thing for children," said
schools chief Arne Duncan. "We're happy to take a fresh look." For the
past 24 years, the public school system has had a voluntary agreement
with the federal government to integrate its schools. But last year
Kocoras called the 1980 agreement "outdated." When the original
agreement was struck, the district was 19 percent white, but that
number has since dwindled to 9.2 percent. [more]
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